Vanish'd is the feverish dream of life,The rich and poor find no distinction here,The great and lowly end their care and strife,The well beloved may have affections tear.But at the last, the oppressor and the slave,Shall equal stand before the bar of God,Of him, who life, and hope, and freedom gave,To all who thro' this vale of tears have trod.Let none then murmur 'gainst the wise decreeThat open'd the door, and set the captive free.
Thursday, February 12, 2026
Vanish'd is the feverish dream of life
The Wanderer from The Exeter Anthology
History
Somewhat of a random fact: the last time Denmark sold an island to the US was in 1917. That island was Little Saint James, more commonly known today as “Epstein Island.” pic.twitter.com/JFE3bRhmvZ
— Daractenus (@Daractenus) January 19, 2026
An Insight
This is why the Left hates to face facts.
— Thomas Sowell Quotes (@ThomasSowell) January 18, 2026
Thomas Sowell speaks the absolute truth.pic.twitter.com/GdEraDGoN0
And all established enterprises and institutions struggle with a high rate of change, no matter what the source.
Pay attention! It’s happening. Late last week, the Financial Times quietly reported “KPMG pressed its auditor to pass on AI cost savings.” Is the billable hour on its last legs?The Financial Times reported that KPMG— one of the world’s Big Four accounting firms— bullied its own auditor into a 14% fee cut. Their argument was elegant in its simplicity: if your AI is doing the work, your people shouldn’t be billing for it. KPMG’s hapless auditor, Grant Thornton, tried to kick but quickly folded like a WalMart lawn chair, dropping its auditing fee from $416,000 to $357,000.And now every CFO on Earth is reaching for a calculator.Here’s the dark comedy. Grant Thornton’s UK audit leader bragged in a December blog post that AI was making their work “faster and smarter.” KPMG took note, and immediately asked why it was still paying the slower-and-dumber price. This is why lawyers tell their clients to stop posting on social media. The marketing department just became the billing department’s worst enemy.As a lawyer who bills by the hour —and I suspect many of you work in professions that do the same— I can assure everyone that this story sent a terrifying chill racing through the spines of every white-collar professional who’s been out there cheerfully babbling about AI adoption at industry conferences.The billable hour has survived the fax machine, personal computers, email, electronic filing, spreadsheets, and the entire internet. The billable hour has the survival instincts of a post-apocalyptic cockroach and the institutional momentum of a Senate tradition. But AI might finally be the dinosaur killer, and KPMG just showed everyone exactly how the asteroid hits: your client reads your own press release and demands a discount.[snip]The billable hour won’t die overnight. But it just got a terminal diagnosis. Every professional services firm that’s spent the last two years bragging about AI efficiency is now staring at the same problem: you can’t brag to your clients you’re faster and also charge them for the same number of hours. As they say at KPMG, it doesn’t add up. Somewhere in a law firm right now, a partner is quietly deleting a LinkedIn post about how AI is “transforming their practice.” Smart move.The first rule of AI efficiency fight club is: you never talk about AI efficiency.
ADC Leader: We have done multiple projects and trials and we have found we can reduce project costs by a third.
NA Account Leader: Next week, I am submitting a proposal to the client for a $6 million project. Does that mean that I can use the ADC and reduce the cost to $4 million?
I see wonderful things
Thank goodness they duckedpic.twitter.com/O601xyZ4jZ
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) January 20, 2026
Offbeat Humor
I think they started with the stones on the bottom layer, then worked their way up. Any other method would be unnecessarily tricky https://t.co/EZisRN3O6f
— Peggy Vimes (@SamuelVimes10) January 18, 2026
Data Talks
Grade inflation and university ideological capture means that a bachelor’s degree is no longer an honest signal of competence. In some woke fields, a PhD is an honest signal of incompetence.
— Colin Wright (@SwipeWright) January 18, 2026
Private industry will start relying on domain-specific tests for hiring decisions. Many… https://t.co/0dT3VPcibP
Two fundamental and consequential trends moving together without much discussion
Turns out, when you deport 500,000 people and 2 million more voluntarily go home, Americans line up for the jobs they were doing—and companies have to pay them more! How Trump repudiated the Democrats' addiction to cheap labor: https://t.co/FL8HJMuhwk pic.twitter.com/0n6Oybswsz
— Batya Ungar-Sargon (@bungarsargon) February 11, 2026
THIS is the real story out of today's jobs report - Trump was handed an economy that was losing private sector jobs and adding gov't payrolls, but he successfully flipped the script, and one year later it's all private sector growth while cutting gov't jobs: pic.twitter.com/R5r5EHgzqk
— E.J. Antoni, Ph.D. (@RealEJAntoni) February 11, 2026

